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N1EE April 17th 04 03:59 AM

I was a 26 M owner
 
Yeah, really, like a Mac dealer would give you
your money back. Those boats must be so hard
to sell, they'd never take one back. How many
stupid people are there out there? They have
to find total rookies to have any hope of selling
one of these boats. If the dealers took boats
back, they'd never sell anything. I'm sure
new owners would want to take them back after
learning what a horrible mistake they made.

Two friends of mine bought a used boat and
bragged about what a great deal they got. At
first I was excited they bought a boat, but
then Diane, saw my expression when she told me
what they bought. I'm no actor. The fact I
was stunned they boat a Mac 26 really seemed to
shake her up. I was so sorry for them.

How do you tell friends they got screwed and
their boat would make a good reef, but perhaps
they could sell the outboard and the beat up
trailer to recoup some of their losses?

Bart Senior


Jim Cate wrote

You are an experienced blue water sailor; you owned a Tartan 37 for
several years and sailed in high-traffic waters around NJ and NY; you
participate in PHRF races; you are a long-time participant on this ng,
during which time you providee advice to novice sailors as to how to
sail, rig, and maintain their boats....and you expect us to believe your
ridiculous story about buying a Mac 26M?

Give us a break.

Jim





Bob Miller wrote:

Hi all. I owned a Mac26M for 3 weeks. I couldn't stand the thing. It
was horrible. I live near Philly and bought the Mac from A1 sailboats
in MD. They are nice folks and I have no qualms with them. But the
boat itself was God awfull. Wouldn't plane, and I had a Merc Big Foot
50 , steered horrible under power. Can't sail worth a damn. Won't
point at all. Wallows dangerously downwind and is slow slow SLOW to
boot. I took it back to the dealer and because of a paper screw up I
was reimbursed 98% of my money.
I am now trying to decide weather to buy a real sailboat and a jetski
or a power boat and a small sailing skiff. I will be moving to the
Annapolis area come July.

BM


Scott Vernon April 17th 04 04:13 AM

I was a 26 M owner
 
"N1EE" wrote in message
om...
Yeah, really, like a Mac dealer would give you
your money back. Those boats must be so hard
to sell, they'd never take one back. How many
stupid people are there out there?


A lot. A WHOLE lot. They sell every one they make. If nothing else, the
boat's a financial success for Macgreger company.

They have
to find total rookies to have any hope of selling
one of these boats.


That is who the boat and their ads are aimed at.



, but perhaps
they could sell the outboard and the beat up
trailer to recoup some of their losses?


The trailers are really crappy too, at least they were.




Jim Cate wrote

You are an experienced blue water sailor; you owned a Tartan 37 for
several years and sailed in high-traffic waters around NJ and NY; you
participate in PHRF races; you are a long-time participant on this ng,



Who the hell is he talking about????????????????????????

SV


Jonathan Ganz April 17th 04 04:27 AM

I was a 26 M owner
 
Well, they sell a lot of the damn things. I have a family friend
who's one of the largest dealers on the west coast. They are
rolling in $$.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com

"N1EE" wrote in message
om...
Yeah, really, like a Mac dealer would give you
your money back. Those boats must be so hard
to sell, they'd never take one back. How many
stupid people are there out there? They have
to find total rookies to have any hope of selling
one of these boats. If the dealers took boats
back, they'd never sell anything. I'm sure
new owners would want to take them back after
learning what a horrible mistake they made.

Two friends of mine bought a used boat and
bragged about what a great deal they got. At
first I was excited they bought a boat, but
then Diane, saw my expression when she told me
what they bought. I'm no actor. The fact I
was stunned they boat a Mac 26 really seemed to
shake her up. I was so sorry for them.

How do you tell friends they got screwed and
their boat would make a good reef, but perhaps
they could sell the outboard and the beat up
trailer to recoup some of their losses?

Bart Senior


Jim Cate wrote

You are an experienced blue water sailor; you owned a Tartan 37 for
several years and sailed in high-traffic waters around NJ and NY; you
participate in PHRF races; you are a long-time participant on this ng,
during which time you providee advice to novice sailors as to how to
sail, rig, and maintain their boats....and you expect us to believe your
ridiculous story about buying a Mac 26M?

Give us a break.

Jim





Bob Miller wrote:

Hi all. I owned a Mac26M for 3 weeks. I couldn't stand the thing. It
was horrible. I live near Philly and bought the Mac from A1 sailboats
in MD. They are nice folks and I have no qualms with them. But the
boat itself was God awfull. Wouldn't plane, and I had a Merc Big Foot
50 , steered horrible under power. Can't sail worth a damn. Won't
point at all. Wallows dangerously downwind and is slow slow SLOW to
boot. I took it back to the dealer and because of a paper screw up I
was reimbursed 98% of my money.
I am now trying to decide weather to buy a real sailboat and a jetski
or a power boat and a small sailing skiff. I will be moving to the
Annapolis area come July.

BM




Horvath April 17th 04 06:45 AM

I was a 26 M owner
 
On Fri, 16 Apr 2004 20:27:00 -0700, "Jonathan Ganz"
wrote this crap:

Well, they sell a lot of the damn things. I have a family friend
who's one of the largest dealers on the west coast. They are
rolling in $$.


Not where I live. They'd make more money if they sold rubber
crutches.

But we have real sailors here.




Screw the rules! They're more like guidelines, anyways.

Jonathan Ganz April 17th 04 08:39 AM

I was a 26 M owner
 
Then why are you "sailing" a hunter? Real sailors
avoid them with nearly the same intensity that they
avoid Macs.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com

"Horvath" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 16 Apr 2004 20:27:00 -0700, "Jonathan Ganz"
wrote this crap:

Well, they sell a lot of the damn things. I have a family friend
who's one of the largest dealers on the west coast. They are
rolling in $$.


Not where I live. They'd make more money if they sold rubber
crutches.

But we have real sailors here.




Screw the rules! They're more like guidelines, anyways.




Horvath April 17th 04 01:56 PM

I was a 26 M owner
 
On Sat, 17 Apr 2004 00:39:51 -0700, "Jonathan Ganz"
wrote this crap:

Then why are you "sailing" a hunter? Real sailors
avoid them with nearly the same intensity that they
avoid Macs.


You don't know any real sailors, Jon-boy.

Go back in your closet.





Screw the rules! They're more like guidelines, anyways.

Jonathan Ganz April 17th 04 04:16 PM

I was a 26 M owner
 
That's right. I don't know any real sailors who would
sail a piece of crap like your hunter.

It's a boat you idiot. A closet (though familiar to you
I'm sure) is not a boat.
--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com

"Horvath" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 17 Apr 2004 00:39:51 -0700, "Jonathan Ganz"
wrote this crap:

Then why are you "sailing" a hunter? Real sailors
avoid them with nearly the same intensity that they
avoid Macs.


You don't know any real sailors, Jon-boy.

Go back in your closet.





Screw the rules! They're more like guidelines, anyways.





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